Rooted Kids Collective · Grades 1 to 3 Edition

Week 2:
My Body Knows

Unit 1: My Strong Self — Children learn to listen to their body as a source of information and build the skill of interoceptive awareness. Grades 1 to 3, designed for the classroom and the home.

6 to 9Ages
4Sessions
2Worksheets
4Activity Cards
Rooted Kids Collective · rootedkidscollective.com
Educator and Parent Lesson Plan
Week 2 · Lesson Plan · Grades 1 to 3
My Body Knows
A complete facilitation guide for parents and educators. No prior SEL training required.
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Lesson Plan · Week 2 · Unit 1: My Strong Self
Interoception, Emotion Mapping, and Body Wisdom
Age Range
Grades 1 to 3 (Ages 6 to 9)
Duration
4 sessions of 20 to 30 minutes each, used flexibly across one week
Big Idea
Children learn to listen to their body as a source of information. By developing interoceptive awareness they build the ability to recognise emotional and physical signals before they become overwhelming, and to use those signals to make decisions that are true to who they are.
SEL Alignment
CASEL Core Competencies
Self Awareness: identifying emotions, recognising how thoughts feelings and behaviours are connected, accurate self perception
Self Management: managing one's emotions and behaviours, using planning and organisational skills
Learning Goals
  • Children can define interoception in their own words
  • Children can identify where they feel at least four different emotions in their body
  • Children can describe what their body feels like when they are calm versus overwhelmed
  • Children can use a body check in independently before a hard situation
Materials
This worksheet set, pencils or pens, coloured pencils for the body mapping activity, quiet space recommended for Session 2
Session 1
approx 20 min
What Is Interoception
Introduce the word interoception and write it where children can see it. Define it in simple terms: Interoception is your ability to feel what is happening inside your body. It is how you know you are hungry before you feel starving. It is how you know you are nervous before you start shaking. It is your body talking to you.

Explain that most people never learn this word but everyone has this ability. Some people are more practised at listening to their body than others. This week we are going to practise.

Ask the group: Has your stomach ever felt funny before something scary or exciting? Has your heart ever beat fast when you were not running? Has your throat ever felt tight when you were trying not to cry? That is interoception. Your body already knows things before your brain catches up.
Therapist Note — Interoception and Emotional Regulation

Interoceptive awareness is a foundational skill for emotional regulation. Children who can identify body based signals early, before dysregulation peaks, have significantly more capacity to make intentional choices about how to respond.

Research in somatic psychology and polyvagal theory suggests that the body registers emotional information before the conscious mind processes it. Teaching children to tune into these signals is not just an emotional literacy skill. It is a nervous system regulation skill.

For children who report not feeling anything in their body or who find this concept confusing, this is worth noting. Some children have learned to disconnect from body signals as a protective response. Approach with curiosity not correction. Ask: What do you notice, even something small?

Hall, S. (2023). Shaping identities: How social work education made me white. Master of Social Work Thesis, McMaster University.
Porges, S.W. (2011). The polyvagal theory. W.W. Norton and Company.

Session 2
approx 30 min
Mapping My Emotions
This is the core activity of the week. Children will map six emotions onto a body outline using different colours to show where they feel each emotion physically.

The six emotions to map: Excited, Nervous, Angry, Sad, Safe, Overwhelmed

Give each emotion a colour: Excited yellow, Nervous orange, Angry red, Sad blue, Safe green, Overwhelmed purple.

Ask children to colour the areas of the body outline where they feel each emotion. There are no right answers. Two children can feel the same emotion in completely different places and both are correct.

After completing the map ask children to write one sentence for each emotion: When I feel [emotion] I notice [body sensation].
Facilitator Script

You: We are going to do something a little different today. We are going to colour a map of our feelings. Not what feelings look like on the outside. What they feel like on the inside.

I am going to say an emotion and I want you to close your eyes for a second and think of a time you felt that way. Really try to remember it. Then notice: where did you feel it in your body? Your chest? Your stomach? Your throat? Your hands? Your legs?

Let us start with excited. Think of something that made you really excited recently.

[Pause 10 to 15 seconds. Let children sit with it.]

Where did you feel that in your body? Colour that part of your body outline in yellow.

[Repeat this process for each of the six emotions, giving children time to actually recall and feel before they colour.]

When everyone has finished, ask: Did anyone feel an emotion somewhere surprising? Did any two emotions feel similar in your body? Which emotion was the easiest to find? Which was the hardest?

There are no wrong answers here. Your body is telling your story.

Facilitation Tip

Some children will feel self conscious about this activity especially in a classroom setting. Make it clear that nobody needs to share their map if they do not want to. The map is for them. Its value comes from the noticing, not the sharing.

Session 3
approx 20 min
My Body Check In
Introduce a simple body check in practice children can use independently. This is a tool for before hard situations: a test, a difficult conversation, a new experience, a moment of conflict.

The Body Check In: Four questions to ask yourself
1. What am I feeling right now?
2. Where am I feeling it in my body?
3. What does my body need right now?
4. What is one thing I can do to help myself before I go into this situation?

Practise together as a group using a low stakes scenario first: you are about to start a test you studied for. Walk through all four questions together out loud.

Then ask children to try it independently using a situation from their own life that feels mildly challenging. Not a crisis. Just something that activates their nervous system a little.
Therapist Note — Why We Check In Before Not During

The body check in is most effective as a proactive tool rather than a crisis intervention. Once a child is in the middle of an emotional surge the window for this kind of reflective practice narrows significantly.

Teaching children to use this check in before hard situations builds the habit of self awareness as a precursor to action rather than a response to breakdown. Over time this becomes automatic and requires less conscious effort.

For children who are frequently dysregulated, practising this check in during genuinely calm moments first is essential before attempting to use it as a regulation strategy.

Session 4
approx 20 min
When My Body Tells Me Something Is Wrong
Connect the interoception work to self trust and safety. Sometimes our body knows something is wrong before our brain has the words for it. That is an important signal to take seriously.

Introduce the concept of a gut feeling as distinct from general anxiety. A gut feeling is often specific: something about this situation does not feel right. Anxiety is often general: what if something bad happens? Both are worth listening to. But gut feelings about specific situations, especially those involving other people and our body or safety, deserve particular attention.

Connect to Week 3 preview: Next week we are going to talk about body rules and consent. What you are learning this week — how to listen to your body — is exactly the skill you will need to trust your own yes, no, and maybe.
Differentiation

For children who struggle to identify body sensations: Start with the most concrete physical sensations — heart beating fast, stomach feeling tight, hands feeling shaky — rather than more subtle ones. Build from the obvious to the subtle over multiple sessions.

For neurodivergent children or those with sensory processing differences: Interoception can be genuinely more difficult for some children due to neurological differences in how body signals are processed. This is not a failure of self awareness. Adjust the activity to focus on what they can notice, however small, and affirm that as valid and important.

For children who have experienced trauma: Body based work can be activating for children with trauma histories. Watch for signs of dissociation or distress and offer the option to observe rather than participate. Never require a child to stay with a body sensation that is causing distress.

Accessibility Note

The body mapping activity can be completed verbally for children who find colouring difficult or distressing. The facilitator or a peer can note verbally where the child says they feel each emotion.

For children with limited colour vision: Use patterns instead of colours — dots for excited, stripes for nervous, and so on. Provide a pattern key on the worksheet.

Recommended Books
Recommended Books for This Week
Stories That Support This Week's Theme
The Huge Bag of Worries
Virginia Ironside
A child carries a bag of worries everywhere she goes until she learns to share them and let some go. Directly supports the concept of noticing and naming what we carry in our body before it becomes too heavy.
Talk About It Together
  • What worries do you carry around that you have not told anyone about yet? You do not have to say what they are — but can you feel where you carry them in your body?
  • What happened when Jenny finally shared her worries? Has sharing a worry ever made it feel smaller for you?
Visiting Feelings
Lauren Rubenstein
Invites children to welcome feelings with curiosity rather than push them away. The sensory and body based language in this book mirrors the interoception work of this week perfectly.
Talk About It Together
  • The book says feelings are visitors. What feeling visits you most often? Where does it sit when it arrives?
  • What does it mean to welcome a feeling instead of pushing it away? Can you try that with one feeling this week?
In My Heart
Jo Witek
Explores the physical experience of emotions in simple and beautiful language. Each emotion is described by what it feels like in the body, which maps directly onto the body mapping worksheet in this week.
Talk About It Together
  • Pick one feeling from the book. Read that page again and notice: do you feel anything in your body just from hearing the words?
  • Which feeling in the book is hardest for you to talk about? What makes it hard?
Worksheet 1 · Student Printable
Worksheet 1 · Week 2
My Emotion Body Map
Name:
Date:
Use the colours below to show where you feel each emotion in your body. Colour the part of the body where you feel it. You can use more than one colour if you feel an emotion in more than one place.
Excited
Nervous
Angry
Sad
Safe
Overwhelmed
Now write one sentence for each emotion:
When I feel excited I notice...
When I feel nervous I notice...
When I feel angry I notice...
When I feel sad I notice...
When I feel safe I notice...
When I feel overwhelmed I notice...
Worksheet 2 · Student Printable
Worksheet 2 · Week 2
My Body Check In Practice
Name:
Date:
Section 1: Learning the Check In
A body check in is something you can do before any hard situation. It takes less than two minutes and it helps you show up as yourself.
1What am I feeling right now?
2Where am I feeling it in my body?
3What does my body need right now?
4What is one thing I can do to help myself before I go into this situation?
Section 2: Practise It
Think of something coming up that feels a little challenging. Not a crisis. Just something that makes your body feel something. Run through the check in.
The situation I am thinking about is:
1What am I feeling right now?
2Where am I feeling it in my body?
3What does my body need right now?
4What is one thing I can do to help myself before I go into this situation?
Section 3: My Calm vs Overwhelmed Map
When I am calm my body feels like...
When I am overwhelmed my body feels like...
One early signal that tells me I am starting to get overwhelmed is:
When I notice that signal I can:
Activity Cards · Print and Cut Apart
Week 2 · Activity Cards
Practise and Explore
Four activities to extend the week's learning. Use in class, at home, or independently.
Activity Card 1 · Solo · Use Anytime
The Body Check In Practice Card

Use this card before any hard situation.


  • 1Pause. Take one slow breath.
  • 2Ask yourself: What am I feeling?
  • 3Ask yourself: Where do I feel it?
  • 4Ask yourself: What do I need?
  • 5Do one small thing to help yourself.

Then go in.


You can use this before:
  • A test or presentation
  • A hard conversation
  • A new situation
  • A moment where you feel pressure
  • Any time your body is telling you something
Activity Card 2 · Small Group · 15 Minutes
Emotion Charades

Play emotion charades with a body focus.


One person acts out an emotion using only body language. No words, no facial expressions if you can help it. Just how your body holds the feeling.


Others guess the emotion.


After each round the actor shares:
  • Where did you actually feel that emotion in your body while you were acting it?

Discussion after:
  • Did your body actually feel something while you were pretending?
  • What does that tell you about how emotions work in the body?
Activity Card 3 · Pairs or Solo · 10 Minutes
Worry vs Gut Feeling

Read each scenario and decide: Is this a worry or a gut feeling? Worries are often general what ifs. Gut feelings are often specific to a situation or person.


Scenario 1: You are about to start a new school year and you feel nervous about whether you will make friends.
Worry or gut feeling?

Scenario 2: A situation comes up that you cannot fully explain but something about it just does not feel right to you.
Worry or gut feeling?

Scenario 3: You are worried your parents might be disappointed in your grades.
Worry or gut feeling?

Scenario 4: Someone asks you to do something and even though you cannot say exactly why, your stomach drops.
Worry or gut feeling?

Talk about: How did you decide? What felt different in your body between the worries and the gut feelings?
Activity Card 4 · Ongoing Journal · Whole Week
My Body This Week

Each day this week notice one thing your body told you. Write it here.


Day 1 · My body told me...
Day 2 · My body told me...
Day 3 · My body told me...
Day 4 · My body told me...
Day 5 · My body told me...

At the end of the week look back:
  • What patterns do you notice?
  • Was there a time you listened to your body?
  • Was there a time you did not and wished you had?